Solvent - Goof-Off Remover or Chart-Pak Blender Marker. Works on mixed media paper, canvas, and panel will all work, and most can be used in visual journals. Surfaces - Most image transfers work best on top of artwork that is all ready started, so gather or create surfaces with color, lines, and textures that you can add to. Iron-on transfer paper for inkjet printers - This specialty paper is also known as printable t-shirt transfer paper, and it is used to create iron-on transfers for t-shirts, but works great in mixed media work.Īcrylic gel medium - I like Golden Soft Gel Matte Make certain that they are clear and distinct with good contrast. Inkjet images on plain paper - We can use prints from your home inkjet printer, so have a few that are printed on plain paper. Your local office supply store is a perfect place to make these copies. Magazine images - Use several magazines since the transfers don’t always work with every magazine.īlack and White Photocopied or Laser Printed images - These need to have a lot of contrast, and must be created with a toner-based machine. This will be a separate email that I send out personally, and it is different from the order confirmation that you will receive automatically after purchase. Once you pay you will be emailed links to the two recorded sessions, typically within 24 hrs of purchase. Like the original, live workshop, this is pay-what-you-can workshop, so please select what you would like to pay below. You will have access to the unedited recorded class sessions in order to work at your own pace. This two-part, online workshop was originally offered as a live workshop through Zoom that met for four hours. Tune in and learn some great techniques to take your creating to a whole new level. We’ll take look at a quick and easy technique using packing tape, but we’ll explore some more advanced techniques using acrylic medium and iron-on printer paper. Join in to learn a wide variety of techniques for transferring found images as well as images of your own. Image transfers are a great way to use images in your mixed work or in your journal. The above blender pen fluid recipe can be made and used on water-based inks, pastels, chalks and crayons.This is now a self-paced workshop, and links to recorded videos will be emailed after purchase. You might like to put a piece of make -up cotton in a small dish and then pour a little of this blender ink to soak the cotton, then dap your brush, cotton bud, or paper stump on the wet make-up cotton to pick up the blender ink. Make sure that you don't have too much liquid on your brush or cotton bud. You can also apply it to your art using a cotton bud, a soft watercolor brush or a paper stump. You don't need to have a blender pen to use this ink. You can test it on a piece of watercolor paper that has been marked with a color marker. You might like to re-do this step if your pen is really dry and needs more of the fluid to stay wet and juicy. I prefer to drop the fluid drop by drop so that it does not become messy and over-inked.Īfter refilling, put back the tube into the pen barrel and push the pen tip part with the cap on into the opening until you hear a click sound.įor the brush part, I just pour a bit of the liquid into the cap of the eye lotion bottle and immerse the brush tip into the fluid until all the liquid is being absorbed into the brush shaped tip. Or you could just use the pump or squeeze the eye lotion bottle to drop the fluid into the fibre shaft. Just throw it in and take out immediately. You can throw the whole tube into the blender pen fluid. Inside is a fibre or felt like stuff inside the plastic tube. Use a tweezer to pull out the plastic wrapped tube. Be gentle and make sure that you do not use too much strength on the transparent covering. To refill your Tombow blender pen, just pull out the tip covering with a pair of pliers after uncapping it.
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